Contents

Motor Trend magazine, an automobile enthusiast publication that debuted in 1949, was the first to name a [1]

Motor Trend’s first award went to Cadillac in 1949 for its V8 engine models[2] (the earliest awards were given to the manufacturer, not to a specific vehicle). It has since expanded the award category to include the pickup truck and sport utility vehicle (SUV) of the year, awarding these separately from the Car of the Year. Until 1999, the award was only eligible to American-made cars; imports had their own category, the Import of the Year. The rationale for the combination was explained by editor Angus Mackenzie as “Because it’s so hard to say that, for example, a Toyota Camry, built in Kentucky and designed in California, is less American than a Ford that may have been built in Canada or Mexico and designed in Europe.”[citation needed] Since the combination of the awards, American cars have won the award seven times, and imports have won six times.

Motor Trend’s Car of the Year is “one of the most prestigious honors bestowed in the auto industry.”[8]

To be eligible for the award, a car must be an “all-new” or “substantially upgraded” vehicle that has been on sale within 12 months from the previous November, vehicles that have been on sale for over five years are ineligible for the award).[9]

Vehicles are subjected a battery of tests: standard car tests such as skid-pad ratings, acceleration and quarter-mile times, and evaluations of the interiors are combined with a track run conducted by SCCA-licensed testers and taking the cars out on normal roads to test their drivability under normal conditions, and fuel economy. Trucks and SUVs add towing capacity and speed, plus an off-road course, to the normal regimen.

Introduced in 1970 for one year and then brought back in 1976 due to distinguishing differences between imports and American cars, was discontinued after the 1999 model year when the line between what is truly American and what isn’t became very blurry.